Ann was born about 1803. Ann McDonald married Norman McLeod. She passed away in 1885.[1] Ann and Norman settled on land at what was later known as Uigg in Queen's County, Prince Edward Island shortly after their arrival from Scotland in 1828 and farmed there until the ends of their lives. Norman and Ann had at least two daughters in Scotland and seven more children baptized at the pioneer Presbyterian church of St. John's at Belfast, PEI, a nearby settlement.[2] Ann, a widow, can be found in the 1881 Census of Canada, Prince Edward Island, Queen's County, Lot 50 living with her son John N. McLeod who took over the farm after his father died.[3]
Ann was born in 1803. She passed away in 1885.
Sources
↑ Grave inscription at Interment.net [1] Uigg Cemetery, Queen's County, Prince Edward Island, Canada "McDonald, Ann, d. 3 Dec 1885, age: 82yrs, of Isle of Skye, Scotland, s/w & wife of Norman McLeod
↑ See PEI children's baptismal records under their profiles
↑ Original image online at Library and Archives Canada [2]
"Prince Edward Island Baptism Card Index, 1721-1885," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KCXN-L1N : 3 April 2020), Ann Mcdonald in entry for Christina Mcleod, 02 Jul 1841; citing p. 136, volume 2, *Fast , Prince Edward Island, Public Archives, Charlottetown; FHL microfilm 1,487,763.
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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Ann by comparing test results with other carriers of her mitochondrial DNA.
However, there are no known mtDNA test-takers in her direct maternal line.
It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Ann:
McDonald-19373 and McDonald-8554 appear to represent the same person because: All the information and dates match, including the dates for daughter Chistena/Christina's birth